1. Britain and the United States
The arrangement of names in Britain and the United States is: given name first, surname last.
For example: John Wilson is John William, where: John is the first name and Wilson is the surname.
2. Spain
Spanish names often have three or four stanzas. Among them: the first and second stanzas are the personal name, the second to last stanza is the father's surname, and the last stanza is the mother's surname. Generally, the father's surname is the personal surname.
Married women often drop their mother's surname and add their husband's surname. The verbal address is often the father's surname or the first name plus the father's surname.
3. France
The general order of name structure is "first name·surname", and some add "te" or translate it as "de" in the middle to indicate noble status. For example, Guy de Maupassant; Onauly de Balzac.
4. Germany
The general order of name structure is "first name·father's name·surname". For example: Karl Heinrich Marx. Germans are accustomed to not using patronymic names, and usually just write Karl Marx; another example is Heinrich Heine. In the German language family, there are also status symbols. For example: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, where "Venture" is a sign of aristocratic origin.
5. Arabic
Only a first name, no surname. The common name structure is "personal name·father's name·grandfather's name". For example, "Mohammed Aliba Ahmed" means that his name is "Mohammed", his father's name is "Alibaba", and his grandfather's name is "Ahmed". Generally, they only use their own names, such as "Sherazade or Dunyazod".